Medievalist Traditions in Nineteenth-Century British Culture: Celebrating the Calendar Year

Clare A Simmons (Contributor)

Medievalist Traditions in Nineteenth-Century British Culture: Celebrating the Calendar Year
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Published
19 March 2021
Pages
238
ISBN
9781843845737

Medievalist Traditions in Nineteenth-Century British Culture: Celebrating the Calendar Year

Clare A Simmons (Contributor)

What does a maypole represent? Why eat hot cross buns? Did Dick Whittington have a cat? All these questions are related to a larger one that nineteenth-century Britons asked themselves: which was more fun: living in their own time, or living in the Middle Ages? While Britain was becoming the most industrially-advanced nation in the world, many vaunted the superiority of the present to the past-yet others felt that if shadows of past ways of life haunted the present, they were friendly ghosts.
This book explores such ghosts and how real or imagined remnants of medieval celebration in a variety of forms created a cultural idea of the Middle Ages. As Britons found, or thought that they found, traces of the medieval in traditions tied to times of the year, medievalism became not only the justification but also the inspiration for community festivity, from Christmas and Boxing Day through Maytime rituals to Hallowe'en, as show in the writings of amongst many others Keats, Browning and Dickens.

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